12 year old Bailey lives with her single dad Bug and brother Hunter in a squat in North Kent. Bug doesn’t have much time for his kids and Bailey who is approaching puberty seeks attention and adventure elsewhere.
Credits:
GB 2023, 119 Min., engl. OmU, Regie: Andrea Arnold Kamera: Robbie Ryan Schnitt: Joe Bini mit: Barry Keoghan, Franz Rogowski, Nykiya Adams, Jason Edward Buda, Jasmine Jobson, James Nelson-Joyce Kayleigh Frankie Box
12 year old Bailey lives with her single dad Bug and brother Hunter in a squat in North Kent. Bug doesn’t have much time for his kids and Bailey who is approaching puberty seeks attention and adventure elsewhere.
Credits:
GB 2023, 119 Min., engl. OmU, Regie: Andrea Arnold Kamera: Robbie Ryan Schnitt: Joe Bini mit: Barry Keoghan, Franz Rogowski, Nykiya Adams, Jason Edward Buda, Jasmine Jobson, James Nelson-Joyce Kayleigh Frankie Box
Artist Johan Grimonprez’s new film essay stems from detailed research about some of the machinations the Western colonial powers, such as his native Belgium or the US, came up with to undermine the African decolonization movement. It specifically reexamines the Democratic Republic of the Congo (then Zaire) and its struggle for independence in the context of the CIA’s history of arts patronage, telling how the US Foreign Intelligence agency sent Louis Armstrong as a jazz ambassador to distract from their involvement in the assassination of newly elected Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba. Nina Simone was sent on a similar tour of Nigeria by a CIA front organization, yet other jazz greats got involved less unwittingly. Dizzy Gillespie briefly ran for president in 1964 and promised that the White House would be renamed the Blues House, while Abbey Lincoln and Max Roach crashed the UN Security Council to protest Lumumba’s assassination. Both a historical pamphlet and a swinging musical composition, SOUNDTRACKTO A COUP D’ETAT unfolds like a record’s extensive sleeve notes, as the jazz sounds propel and carry along facts, figures and footnotes of major and minor histories with them at dizzying speed. (Antoine Thirion)
Credits:
BE/FR/NL 2024, 150 Min., engl., frz. OmU,
Regie: Johan Grimonprez,
mit: Patrice Lumumba, Louis Armstrong, Andrée Blouin, Nina Simone, Nikita Krutschev, Eisenhower, Fidel Castro, Duke Elligton
Libuše Jarcovjáková documents her life with analogue photos and diary entries. Her Czechoslovakian homeland is in the repressive phase of “normalisation” after the suppression of the Prague Spring in 1968. The young photographer searches for islands of freedom in Prague as well as her sexual identity; her camera is her constant companion. One of these islands is the T‑Club, a meeting place for the queer scene. When a murder is committed and the police become interested in Libuše’s photos from the club, her personal journey of emancipation is abruptly cut short. She enters into a marriage of convenience and moves to West Berlin. But this new world is also filled with obstacles. Using the last of her money, she flies to Tokyo and, for a short time, becomes a sought-after fashion photographer there. Continuing to search for the life she wants to live, Libuše’s path leads her back to Prague via Berlin after the fall of the Iron Curtain. Using only photographs and the diary entries she reads out herself, the artist – together with the filmmaker – intimately relates her search for identity, everyday struggles, physicality, relationships and emotions
Credits:
Ještě nejsem, kým chci být CZ/SK/AU 2024, 90 Min., tschechische Originalfassung mit deutschen Untertiteln Regie: Klára Tasovská Schnitt: Alexander Kashcheev
Trailer:
NOCHBINICHNICHT, WERICHSEINMÖCHTE Trailer Deutsch | German [HD]
A target of Iran’s hardline conservative government for his films’ criticism of the state, director Mohammad Rasoulof fled his home country to avoid an eight-year prison sentence, though he hadn’t finished editing his latest film yet. His searing drama The Seed of the Sacred Fig won a Special Prize from the jury and three other awards on its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival. The film is every bit as urgent and gripping as its real-life backstory would portend: longtime government worker Iman (Missagh Zareh) has just received a major promotion to the role of judge’s investigator, to the hopeful delight of his wife Najmeh (Soheila Golestani); at the same moment, a series of student protests against the government have exploded in the streets, stoking the sympathies of their independent-minded daughters Rezvan (Mahsa Rostami) and Sana (Setareh Maleki). The growing wedge between progressive children and traditional parents intensifies through a series of unsettling events that put Iman’s future in jeopardy. Both paranoia thriller and domestic drama, The Seed of the Sacred Fig is above all an epic of anti-patriarchal political conviction.
Credits:
IR, DE, FR 2024, 168 Min., farsi OmU Regie: Mohammad Rasoulof Kamera: Pooyan Aghababaei Schnitt: Andrew Bird mit Missagh Zareh, Soheila Golestani, Mahsa Rostami, Setareh Maleki, Niousha Akhshi
12 year old Bailey lives with her single dad Bug and brother Hunter in a squat in North Kent. Bug doesn’t have much time for his kids and Bailey who is approaching puberty seeks attention and adventure elsewhere.
Credits:
GB 2023, 119 Min., engl. OmU, Regie: Andrea Arnold Kamera: Robbie Ryan Schnitt: Joe Bini mit: Barry Keoghan, Franz Rogowski, Nykiya Adams, Jason Edward Buda, Jasmine Jobson, James Nelson-Joyce Kayleigh Frankie Box
A Real Pain follows mismatched cousins David and Benji who reunite for a tour through Poland to honor their beloved grandmother. The adventure takes a turn when the odd couple’s old tensions resurface against the backdrop of their family history.
Credits:
US/PL 2024, 90 Min., engl. OmU Regie: Jesse Eisenberg Kamera: Michael Dymak Schnitt: Robert Nassau mit Jesse Eisenberg, Kieran Culkin, Will Sharpe, Jennifer Grey, Kurt Egyiawan, Liza Sadovy, Daniel Oreskes
Trailer:
A REALPAIN | Official Teaser | Searchlight Pictures
Light is a fascinating phenomenon. Without light, there would be no cinema, no film – and no life. So light is at the origin of everything, and yet it remains invisible to the eye until it hits matter. This moment is – quite literally – the starting point of Thomas Riedelsheimer’s latest work, for the springtime spectacle of rainbow shreds in the cinematographer and documentary filmmaker’s flat became the starting point of a search for the origin of the images we form of this world. For this quest he dived deep into two spheres that seem to follow different laws but always strive to fathom the magical: physics and art. An intellectual and poetic ping pong game evolves between researchers from the Max Planck Institute in Erlangen and the “Extreme Light Group” of the University of Glasgow as well as internationally renowned artists such as Ruth Jarman, Joe Gerhardt, Julie Brook, Johannes Brunner and Raimund Ritz. In its course, the various perspectives on light lead to new insights on all sides that would hardly have been achieved without this methodical cross-over: about laser power and colour pigments, about black holes and floating sculptures. In brief moments, the uninitiated may even get some idea of the laws of quantum physics, generally considered impossible to visualise.
Luc-Carolin Ziemann
Credits:
DE/GB 2024, 99 Min., OmU Regie, Kamera, Schnitt: Thomas Riedelsheimer Musik: Fred Frith, gabby fluke-mogul
In 1980, two biographies cross paths in a Paris cinema: those of young cinema-goer Alexander Horwath and the actor Henry Fonda. Horwath recognised early on that the popular view of Fonda as a “typical American” and the “conscience of the USA” in his acting roles doesn’t paint the full picture. It is the more convoluted paths of Fonda’s biography and how he played roles and embodied attitudes extending beyond individual characters that truly interest Horwath. Thrillingly edited with Michael Palm, his essay film follows them across the history of film into an imaginary republic of places, times, characters: “The United States of Fonda”. Fonda becomes the link between an old and a new America, the thoughtful face of the alleged transition from the law of the jungle to civilisation as well as a critic of an American self-image that only serves itself. Paradoxically, it’s the magic of cinema invoked in the film that contributes to this (self-)disenchantment of America via its own specific techniques and the help of one of its greatest magicians. And in doing so creates a wonderfully complex cinematic memorial to both the USA and storyteller and actor Fonda – the president that never was.
Credits:
AT/DE 2024, 184 Min., engl./dt. Originalfassung mit deutschen und englischen Untertiteln Regie: Alexander Horwath Kamera & Schnitt: Michael Palm
Trailer:
Henry Fonda for President (2024) | Trailer | Regie: Alexander Horwath
The world seems to be coming to an end, teeming with the vestiges of a human presence. Cat is a solitary animal, but as its home is devastated by a great flood, he finds refuge on a boat populated by various species, and will have to team up with them despite their differences. In the lonesome boat sailing through mystical overflowed landscapes, they navigate the challenges and dangers of adapting to this new world.
Artist Johan Grimonprez’s new film essay stems from detailed research about some of the machinations the Western colonial powers, such as his native Belgium or the US, came up with to undermine the African decolonization movement. It specifically reexamines the Democratic Republic of the Congo (then Zaire) and its struggle for independence in the context of the CIA’s history of arts patronage, telling how the US Foreign Intelligence agency sent Louis Armstrong as a jazz ambassador to distract from their involvement in the assassination of newly elected Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba. Nina Simone was sent on a similar tour of Nigeria by a CIA front organization, yet other jazz greats got involved less unwittingly. Dizzy Gillespie briefly ran for president in 1964 and promised that the White House would be renamed the Blues House, while Abbey Lincoln and Max Roach crashed the UN Security Council to protest Lumumba’s assassination. Both a historical pamphlet and a swinging musical composition, SOUNDTRACKTO A COUP D’ETAT unfolds like a record’s extensive sleeve notes, as the jazz sounds propel and carry along facts, figures and footnotes of major and minor histories with them at dizzying speed. (Antoine Thirion)
Credits:
BE/FR/NL 2024, 150 Min., engl., frz. OmU,
Regie: Johan Grimonprez,
mit: Patrice Lumumba, Louis Armstrong, Andrée Blouin, Nina Simone, Nikita Krutschev, Eisenhower, Fidel Castro, Duke Elligton
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